What is Rapid Transformational Therapy?

Rapid Transformational Therapy is an exciting and unique approach to addressing a wide range of emotional and physical issues, blocks, beliefs and behaviours. This hybrid therapy, developed by multi-award winning Marisa Peer, combines the use of Hypnotherapy while embracing many of the positive aspects of Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT), Psychotherapy, Psychology and Neurolingusitic Programming (NLP).

Rapid Transformational Therapy allows us to directly to communicate with the subconscious mind under hypnosis to really quickly and effectively get to the cause of many issues, both physical and emotional - and most importantly, using a range of specially developed tools, rapidly reprogram and rewire these outdated beliefs to produce profound, powerful and permanent change. Most issues are dealt with in just one session, although deeply rooted issues may require up to three sessions.

So how does this work? The human brain is an amazing machine, and one of the most interesting concepts that is utilised in RTT is the incredible capacity of the brain and the nervous system to modify itself - both physically and functionally - and adapt to both experience and injury. This process is known as neuroplasticity, and it’s the same way that a person can relearn and regain the ability to walk after being affected by a head injury or stroke - the brain is able to reorganise and reprogram neural pathways to adapt to challenges.

That means that, given the right conditions, the brain is literally able to reorganise and restructure to best serve you. And so, intervening with this therapy process disrupts those old, unhelpful thought patterns. Once you question a belief, you no longer believe it - and disrupting this old belief system is one of the key processes of RTT. When it comes to neuroplasticity, it’s said that “neurons that fire together, wire together” and, of equal importance, “use it or lose it”. So, by disrupting these old thought patterns and actively choosing new, powerful and positive beliefs and behaviours, we’re showing our brains that this old wiring is no longer needed - that we’d much rather “lose it”! By choosing not to use these old wiring pathways, the mind registers that they are no longer helpful or necessary, and that path is literally cleaned away in a process called “synaptic pruning” - cool, huh?